Wednesday, April 14, 2021

RSN: FOCUS: Country Catching Up to Bernie Sanders's Way of Thinking

 


 

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14 April 21

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FOCUS: Country Catching Up to Bernie Sanders's Way of Thinking
In this image from video, Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., speaks during debate in the Senate at the US Capitol in Washington, Saturday, March 6, 2021. (photo: AP)
Jeff Robbins, The Boston Herald
Robbins writes: "Americans are with him."

ernie Sanders was never the most all-American of presidential candidates. The Brooklyn-born socialist senator from Vermont has an overpowering New York accent. Lecturing America relentlessly on its ills, he presented as a cross between Scrooge and the Grim Reaper, seemingly as likely to appeal to American voters as Leon Trotsky, with whom he appeared to share a hair stylist. He did not slap backs, could not tell jokes and spouted policy prescriptions that sounded right out of “Das Kapital.”

First in 2016 and then again in 2020 he was underestimated, and even dismissed. New York Times reporter Amy Chozick recounts missing the meaning of Sanders’ message in 2016, nearly blowing off the opportunity to interview him early in that campaign in favor of a physical fitness class. “I initially brushed Bernie off with such casual nonchalance, such ill-informed elite media snobbery,” she has written, “that I almost canceled our first one-on-one coffee because I didn’t want to miss abs-and-back day at boot camp.”

Today it’s clear that on issue after issue, Sanders’ thunder on the left has carried the day among a majority of Americans, including substantial numbers of Republicans. Conservative attacks on Sanders-style proposals for universal health care, raising taxes on the wealthy, raising the federal minimum wage and other programs as “European socialism,” once tried and true, are increasingly falling flat.

So say the polls, in any event.

In announcing his candidacy for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2019, for example, Sanders proclaimed “We say to the American people that we will rebuild our crumbling infrastructure: our roads, our bridges, our rail systems and subways and our airports,” vowing to create millions of jobs in the process. And he promised to tax the rich to pay for it. “The wealthy and multi-national corporations in this country,” Sanders said, “will start paying their fair share of taxes.”

Americans are with him. Asked last month whether they would support President Biden’s massive public infrastructure plan even after passage of a $1.9 trillion COVID relief act, 77% of Democrats, 57% of independents and 61% of Republicans told Data for Progress pollsters that they would. A Morning Consult poll two weeks ago found that 54% of Americans supported funding those improvements by raising taxes on those earning over $400,000 a year and by raising the corporate tax rate. Unsurprisingly, this included 73% of Democrats. More notably, it included 52% of independents and 32% of Republicans. Fifty-seven percent of voters told the pollsters that they would be more likely to support Biden’s infrastructure plan if it included raising taxes on high earners; only 17% said it would make them less likely to do so. Forty-seven percent of Americans said they would be likelier to support the bill if it was paid for by raising corporate taxes, while only 21% said it would make them less likely to support it.

Raising taxes to invest in public infrastructure is not the only issue on which America’s political sands are shifting. A poll taken last fall by the Kaiser Family Foundation concluded that 53% of Americans supported a national health plan that would insure everyone. This included 58% of independents and 21% of Republicans. A contemporaneous Pew Research Center poll found that 63% of American adults believe that government bears responsibility for providing health care coverage for all, up from 2019. This included 34% of Republicans. And a recent Morning Consult poll found that a majority of Republicans support raising the federal minimum wage.

It has been a very long time since Bernie Sanders could be ignored. If once it could be said that he was ahead of his time, it must now be said that Americans are catching up to him.

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BLACK MATERNAL HEALTH WEEK

 

April 13, 2021 (Tuesday)
Today, the administration issued a proclamation on Black Maternal Health Week. It noted that Black American mothers die from pregnancy-related complications at two to three times the rates of White, Hispanic, Asian American, and Pacific Islander women, no matter what their income or education levels. President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris declared their commitment to “building a health care system that delivers equity and dignity to Black, Indigenous, and other women and girls of color.”
There has been talk lately about President Biden assuming the mantle of Democratic president Franklin Delano Roosevelt, who piloted the nation through the Great Depression and World War II. There is a lot to that. Biden is enthusiastically embracing the idea that the government has a role to play in regulating business, providing a basic social safety net, and promoting infrastructure. That ideology has been on the ropes since voters elected President Ronald Reagan, who argued that the government pioneered by Roosevelt smothered business growth and stifled individualism by levying taxes for programs that Washington bureaucrats thought would benefit the nation.
Since he took office, Biden has used the government to help ordinary Americans. He began by ramping up coronavirus vaccines at an astonishing rate, and then got through Congress the $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan, designed to rebuild the economy after the devastation of the coronavirus pandemic. Now he is turning to the American Jobs Plan, another massive package designed to remake American infrastructure as it creates high-paying jobs, just as FDR’s New Deal did.
Biden is clearly trying to undermine the Republican mantra that government is inefficient, and he is succeeding. His own chief of staff, Ron Klain, has made it a point to compare the two men.
But an article by Laura Barron-Lopez, Alex Thompson, and Theodoric Meyer in Politico begs to differ. Based on an interview with House Majority Whip James Clyburn (D-SC), the piece makes the argument that Biden is far more President Harry Truman than FDR. Unlike FDR, who constantly had to compromise with white southern Democrats to get his measures through Congress and thus had to back off on issues of racial justice, Truman worked to advance civil rights in the U.S. More like Truman than FDR, Biden has focused on addressing racial equity in his response to the various crises he has taken on in his first days in office.
To my mind, though, what jumps out about Biden and Harris is not their focus on either jobs or Black Americans, but rather their attention to the needs of children and mothers. Even before the pandemic, 21.4 million American women lived in poverty, as did nearly 11 million children, about 14.4% of kids under the age of 18.
The American Rescue Plan increased the Child Tax Credit from $2000 to $3600 for children under age 6 and $3000 for other children under age 18, offering monthly payments immediately, in advance of the 2022 tax filing season. The measure also provided $15 billion in expanded childcare assistance, and it increased food benefits (SNAP) by 15%.
Experts estimated that the American Rescue Plan could cut child poverty in the U.S. by more than half.
The administration’s American Jobs Plan continues the focus on children and their mothers as it sets out to shore up the caregiving economy. The coronavirus pandemic hit women particularly hard as women, particularly women of color, left the workforce to care for children when childcare centers closed. Women have lost 5.4 million jobs, nearly a million more than men. The American Jobs Plan would invest $400 billion in the caregiving economy; $137 billion in schools, early learning centers, and community colleges; $111 billion in clean drinking water; and $621 billion in transportation.
FDR tried to shore up the nuclear family, headed by a man—usually a White man—enabling him to support a wife and children. Truman nodded toward including men of color in that vision. But Biden and Harris are recentering American society on children and on their mothers, giving mothers the power to support their children regardless of their marital status. Theirs is a profound reworking of American society, much more in keeping with what has always been our reality despite our mythological focus on an independent man and his family.
The crisis in Black maternal health is not new; a 2017 report from the LA Times revealed that maternal death rates more than doubled between 1987 and 2013, with Black women suffering in the highest percentages. But it is hard to imagine any previous president making it a priority. That Biden does suggests that his vision of rebuilding America is not that of FDR or Truman, but something entirely original.

MASSterList: Confusion and concern | Vocational change | Spilka’s ‘moonshot’: Today's sponsor - Mascon Medical

 

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04/14/2021

Confusion and concern | Vocational change | Spilka’s ‘moonshot’

 
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Happening Today
 
House budget, UMass tuition vote, redistricting hearing
 

-- House Ways and Means Committee today is expected to release its rewrite of Gov. Charlie Baker's $45.6 billion fiscal 2022 budget. 

-- The Governor's Council holds two meetings today, the first to interview Carol Vittorioso, the acting clerk magistrate of Fitchburg District Court who was nominated by Gov. Baker to take the job permanently, and the second to review the nomination of Brendan Moran to become clerk magistrate of the Worcester Juvenile Court, 9:30 a.m. and 11:30 a.m., respectively.

-- University of Massachusetts Board of Trustees holds a remote meeting with plans to vote on 2021-2022 tuition and charges for the Amherst, Boston, Dartmouth, Lowell and medical school campuses, 10 a.m.

-- Special Joint Committee on Redistricting holds a virtual public hearing as it begins its work on the decennial effort to redraw the boundaries of legislative and Congressional districts, 11 a.m.

-- Health Policy Commission meets with plans to release initial results from its interim report on the impacts of COVID-19 on the state's health care system, 12 p.m.

For the most comprehensive list of calendar items, check out State House News Service’s Daily Advances (pay wall – free trial subscriptions available), as well as MassterList’s Beacon Hill Town Square below.

 
 
Keller at Large 4/13
 
 

Prefer to enjoy Keller at Large in print rather than audio?

You can access Jon’s most recent columns here:

4/6/21 - Can You Represent the Whole City?

3/29/21 - The Premature Obit For Baker's Vaccine Rollout

3/22/21 - Will Boston Want More of the Same?

 
 
Today's News
 
Reminder to readers: SHNS Coronavirus Tracker available for free
 

A reminder to our readers as the coronavirus crisis unfolds: The paywalled State House News Service, which produces MASSterList, is making its full Coronavirus Tracker available to the community for free on a daily basis each morning via ML. SHNS Coronavirus Tracker.

 
 
The coronavirus numbers: 7 new deaths, 17,068 total deaths, 1,401 new cases
 

WCVB has the latest coronavirus numbers for Massachusetts.

 
 
The J&J fallout: Confusion and concern across the state
 

Medical officials are stressing that yesterday’s sudden halt in administering Johnson & Johnson vaccines was done out of an “abundance of caution” in order to review six cases, out of millions of shots given, that may tie the vaccine to extremely rare but severe blood clots.

But the logistical and PR damage was done within hours after federal and state officials announced the temporary pause in J&J shots. From a three-reporter team at WBUR: “Pause In J&J Distribution Causes Confusion And Concern In Mass.” From the Globe’s Robert Weisman and Jonathan Satzman: “Halt in J&J shots deepens vaccination uncertainties at a critical time.” From the Herald’s Lisa Kashinsky: “Massachusetts medical experts express concern about vaccine hesitancy amid Johnson & Johnson pause.”

Meanwhile, thousands of scheduled J&J appointments were cancelled yesterday across the state. Here’s a sampling of local headlines, starting with the Eagle Tribune: “Methuen cancels Johnson & Johnson vaccine clinic at the Loop.” From Cambridge Day: “Concern over blood clots ceases vaccine clinic using Johnson & Johnson in North Cambridge.” But there was also calming voices yesterday. From the Telegram: “Worcester health officials believe J&J vaccine effective despite state pause.”

The good news, via the NYT: “J&J Vaccine and Blood Clots: The Risks, if Any, Are Very Low.” And the J&J pause may be for only a few days, officials stress.

 
 
Lawmakers on surprise UI rate hikes: We’re working on a fix
 

SHNS’s Chris Lisinski and MassLive’s Steph Solis report that a “growing chorus” of lawmakers on Beacon Hill are pushing to lessen the impact of surprise unemployment-insurance rate hikes facing many employers across the state. And legislators think they may have hit upon a solution: Federal funds. Lisinski and Solis explain.

Meanwhile, Senate President Karen Spilka yesterday told the Greater Boston Chamber that lawmakers were taken by surprise by the rate increases and are trying to address the issue ASAP, reports the Globe’s Jon Chesto.

 
 
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As state eyes in-person summer learning improvements …
 

Amid concerns many students have academically suffered during the pandemic, state education officials are “working toward launching a partnership aimed at enhancing summer programming, particularly for students who have had limited experience with in-person schooling,” reports SHNS’s Katie Lannan.

SHNS (pay wall -- free trial subscription available)
 
 
… Riley proposes sweeping change to vocational school admissions
 

From summer school to vocational schools, CommonWealth’s Bruce Mohl reports that Education Commissioner Jeff Riley is proposing a “sweeping update” of admission policies to vocational schools amid widespread complaints the suddenly popular technical schools have become too selective on who they admit – at the expense of low-income and minority students. Mohl has details on the proposed changes aimed at eliminating demographic disparities.

CommonWealth
 
 
Working it out: Parties in Worcester voting rights suit say possible settlement in sight
 

In other school news, they’re talking it out in Worcester. A group of plaintiffs suing Worcester over how the local school board is elected and the city’s lawyers are telling a judge they may be able to come to a resolution of the case without court proceedings, Scott O’Connell of the Telegram reports. 

Telegram
 
 
Report: The state also knew of child-molesting charge against ex-police union boss
 

It keeps getting worse. From the Globe’s Andre Ryan and Milton Valencia: “State child welfare investigators believed in 1995 that there was evidence that a child had been abused by Boston police Officer Patrick M. Rose Sr., raising more questions about how the future union chief was able to keep his badge for another two decades.”

Meanwhile, it’s all police all the time for Boston’s new acting mayor. From the Herald’s Sean Philip Cotter: “Kim Janey announces Boston Police oversight director, vows release of Patrick Rose files by end of week.”

Boston Globe
 
 
Reportal April 12
 
 
Mostly undecided: Early poll gives Wu and Janey early lead in Boston mayoral race
 

Speaking of the acting mayor, Kim Janey and City Councilor Michelle Wu are basically tied for the lead to become Boston’s next mayor -- but the majority of voters remain undecided five months ahead of the preliminary election, a new MassInc poll finds. Callum Borchers at WBUR reports Wu was the top choice of 19 percent of voters compared to 18 percent for Janey, while the three other declared candidates drew single-digit support. 

WBUR
 
 
‘Over-policing’: Group says New Bedford police targeting minorities
 

And speaking of police: The pattern, they say, is clear. A report from Citizens for Juvenile Justice says police in New Bedford stop, frisk or question Black people at “significantly” higher rates than whites, Shelley Murphy at the Globe reports. The group plans to deliver its findings -- which pin blame largely on a small number of officers in the department’s gang uni t-- to city officials today. 

 
 
Spilka’s ‘moonshot’ goal: Intergenerational Care Centers
 

Saying Massachusetts needs to launch a “moonshot”-like effort to help mostly female caregivers across the state, Senate President Karen Spilka yesterday outlined a plan to establish new “Intergenerational Care Centers” that could help overburdened family members learn about childcare, elder care and disability care, and receive referrals for services, reports the BBJ’s Catherine Carlock.

SHNS’s Matt Murphy has more on Spilka’s ambitious plan unveiled yesterday in a speech to the Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce.

BBJ
 
 
Vehicle-inspection debacle update: RMV extends inspection grace period to the end of May
 

Universal Hub’s Adam Gaffin reports that the RMV, which is still grappling with a vendor-caused shutdown of its vehicle-inspection system, says cars with expired stickers from March and April will now have until May 31 to (hopefully) get their cars inspected.

Universal Hub
 
 
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Cannabis Commission member leaves to take post at marijuana-regulatory law firm
 

The Telegram’s Cyrus Moulton reports that Jennifer Flanagan, the former state legislator and one of the original members of the Cannabis Control Commission, is leaving the commission to “join a law firm working on marijuana regulatory policy across the country.” 

Telegram
 
 
Kennedy joins board of Westwood clean-tech firm
 

Former U.S. Rep. Joseph Kennedy III is keeping busy in his post-Congressional days. His latest move: joining the board of Westwood-based clean-tech firm enVerid Systems, the Globe’s Jon Chesto reports.

 
 
History mysteries: Mayor searches for owner of antique sword as Bunker Hill officials demand auctioned guestbook back
 

We have two history-buff alerts this morning. First, Leominster Mayor Dean Mazzarella is looking for the “rightful owner” of an antique sword that was mysteriously sent to his office and that he strongly believes was stolen decades ago, according to a report at WCVB.

Second, the folks overseeing the Bunker Hill Monument say an old Civil War-era guestbook – once signed by Mary Todd Lincoln and other dignitaries – was mysteriously auctioned off yesterday and they want the book back, reports the Globe’s Brian MacQuarrie.

 
 
He watched ‘Breaking Bad,’ so he broke bad
 

It’s not quite a Twinkie defense, but it’s close. From CBS Boston: “The former head of advanced research at a Boston-area biotechnology company told investigators he was inspired by the television show ‘Breaking Bad’ when he tried to obtain the powerful poison ricin, federal prosecutors said Tuesday.”

CBS Boston
 
 
Jobs
 
 
Emily’s List targets Baker and two other New England GOP governors
 

It’s not an enemies list. Just a target list. The Herald’s Lisa Kashinsky reports that Emily’s List, the deep-pocketed group known for its support for pro-abortion Democrats, has put Republican Gov. Charlie Baker and the GOP governors of New Hampshire and Vermont “on notice” as “targets” in the 2022 election cycle. Baker, who hasn’t said if he’s running for a third term next year, is considered pro-choice, fyi.

Boston Herald
 
 
Emotional tribute to Billy Evans at U.S. Capitol
 

The Berkshire Eagle’s Francesca Paris reports on the sad and moving tribute yesterday to the late William ‘Billy’ Evans, the North Adams native and U.S. Capitol guard who was killed in the most recent attack on the Capitol. Even a Fox News anchor was describing President Biden’s poignant speech as “iconic,” reports Mediaite.

Berkshire Eagle
 
 
Holding pattern: Census delay impacts redistricting timeline
 

File not found. The Massachusetts’ Redistricting Commission is slated to meet today but won’t be able to do much actual work because of delays in the U.S. Census that means the state is still waiting for the data that will be used to divvy up Congressional and state legislative districts, Christian Wade of the Salem News reports.

Salem News
 
 
Well done: Candidate praises cops after his own son caught vandalizing opponent’s yard sign
 

Williamstown Select Board candidate Jeffrey Johnson is heaping praise on the cops who responded to calls about his opponent’s lawn signs going missing--only to find out the culprit was Johnson’s own 14-year-old son, Scott Stafford at the Berkshire Eagle reports. For his part, Johnson’s opponent, Anthony Boskovich, says he regrets the matter ever became public.  

Berkshire Eagle
 
 
Today's Headlines
 
Metro
 

Boston to resume towing, parking fines - Boston Herald

Lynn BLM mural to go before council committee - Lynn Item

 
Massachusetts
 

Fairhaven elects first openly transgender official - Standard-Times

Oversight hearing on Holyoke Soldiers’ Home canceled as state official rescinds offer to testify  - MassLive

New blueprint for downtown development now the law in Pittsfield - Berkshire Eagle

 
Nation
 

IRS chief warns of unpaid taxes hitting $1 trillion - The Hill

Pelosi invites Biden to address Congress - Politico

 
Jobs
 

Reach MASSterList's 22,000 Beacon Hill connected and policy-minded subscribers with your job postings. Have friends interested in one of these positions? Forward the newsletter to them! Contact David Art at dart@massterlist.com or call 860-576-1886 for more information.

 
Recent postings to the MASSterList Job Board:
 

Policy/Intergovernmental Affairs Associate - new!, City of Brockton

Director of Development - new!, MassBudget

Assistant Deputy Chief Counsel - new!, Department of Housing & Community Development

EDI Training Coordinator - new!, Department of Housing & Community Development

Deputy Director of Communications - new!, Office of Consumer Affairs and Business Regulation (OCABR)

Account Director - new!, The Castle Group

Vice President (Labor Communications), 617MediaGroup

Membership and Operations Manager, Boston Municipal Research Bureau

General Counsel, Massachusetts Organization of State Engineers and Scientists (MOSES)

Associate Vice President, 90 West, LLC

Co-Director for Public Policy and Government Relations, Massachusetts Association for Mental Health (MAMH)

Reporter, Commonwealth

Maintenance Tech, MA House of Representatives

Principal Clerk, Collector’s Office, City of Everett

Executive Secretary to the Mayor, City of Marlborough

Public Affairs Principal, Kivvit

Environmental Attorney, Miyares and Harrington LLP

 

To view more events or post an event listing on Beacon Hill Town Square, please visit events.massterlist.com.

Beacon Hill Town Square
 
Apr. 14, 10:30 a.m.
MassEcon Forum: Massachusetts Business Incentives Primer
Hosted by: MassEcon
 
Massachusetts knows how to compete. On April 14, as the Red Sox take on the Twins, the Celtics get ready for the Lakers, and the Bruins prepare for the Islanders, join MassEcon and its Team Massachusetts partners as they explain the business incentive programs that enable Massachusetts to win global competitions for employers looking to invest in facilities and create new jobs. More Information

 
 
Apr. 14, 12 p.m.
How Snowflake's Data Capabilities Increased Profitability for a Fortune 500 Retailer
Hosted by: Focus Technology
 
Hear from Steve DiPietro, VP of Data Analytics Practice at Focus and former Snowflake customer, discuss how Snowflake's near zero management ecosystem positively and profitably impacted his workflow at a global Fortune 500 retailer. He will be joined by Jonathan Tao, System Engineer and Andrew Fleming, Partner Manager at Snowflake to review top workload/focus areas for Snowflake's users. More Information

 
 
Apr. 14, 1 p.m.
The Earth Convention - Sustainable Cities
Hosted by: 5 x 15
 
In this session of Earth Convention, we will explore examples of cities across the world that are taking the lead on green initiatives. How can we design and plan urban infrastructure to be more sustainable? We will look at how citizens are organizing and working in partnership with city governments, civil society and businesses, and at how transport is changing. More Information

 
 
Apr. 14, 4:30 p.m.
Inaugural David Cooper Lecture - Dr. Anthony S. Fauci
Hosted by: UNSW Centre for Ideas
 
Whilst the Covid-19 pandemic has been devastating in the USA, Dr. Anthony S. Fauci has remained a voice of authority and reason, bringing scientific evidence to the fore. He will sit down with Tegan Taylor, co-host of the ABC's Coronacast, to discuss the past, present, and the future - from what we learned from the HIV/AIDS epidemic to what the ongoing impact of Covid-19 will be. More Information

 
 
Apr. 14, 6 p.m.
Project PhaEDRA and Star Notes - John G. Wolback Library Center for Astrophysics
Hosted by: Boston Public Library
 
Project PHaEDRA is an initiative to catalog, digitize and transcribe over 2500 logbooks and notebooks produced by the Harvard Computers, a group of women astronomers. The Star Notes project provides an opportunity to transcribe the notes of the Harvard Computers and accentuate their legacy and contribution to the field of astrophysics. More Information

 
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